Rasinski Conference Notes - Sept 30 2015
Rasinski Conference Notes - Sept 30 2015
Rasinski Conference Notes - Sept 30 2015
Reading
Dr. Tim Rasinski
timrasinski.com
Intro (The Garden Song, see last page): Why are songs and rhythmic poetry important?
Its fun. Our brain releases more endorphins & serotonin when we are singing. School isnt as
much fun as it used to befor teachers or kids.
Its cultural. Students today in America dont have a good sense of what it means to be
American. Robert Pinsky said we carry our culture on the backs of American song & rhetoric.
Think about Yankee Doodleclose to 80 versions written by Americans sharing culture.
o The Battle Cry of Freedom by George F. Root
o Over There
o Civil Rights movement songs
o Four Dead in Ohio by Neil Young
o Back to School songs
o Military Service songs in conjunction with God Bless America (written by Irving Berlin ,
first performed on November 11th by Kate Smith)
Could present on November 10th
Woodie Guthrie so taken by God Bless America that he wrote his own song from
the common persons perspective: This Land is Your Land
Invites discussion.
Its aesthetic. Louise Rosenblatt said that there are two types of reading, efferent reading and
aesthetic reading
o Efferent reading: reading to take away particular bits of information. Here, the
reader is not interested in the rhythms of the language or the prose style but is focused
on obtaining a piece of information. Rosenblatt states, the readers attention is
primarily focused on what will remain as a residue after the reading the information
to be acquired, the logical solution to a problem, the actions to be carried out.
o Aesthetic reading: reading to explore the work and oneself. Here, readers are
engaged in the experience of reading, itself. Rosenblatt states, In aesthetic reading,
the readers attention is centered directly on what he is living through during his
relationship with that particular text. [110, p. 25 ]
Its reading!
o Question Everything Albert Einstein
Its not asking kids to question things, but to ask good questions.
Questioning oral reading when compared to silent reading.
You hear yourself
Youre articulating the sounds of the language
Give yourself something thats meant to be read orally (songs!); meant to
be read repeatedly
Research Promotes the Use of Songs, Poems to Promote Reading:
Name that Word: Using song lyrics to improve the decoding skills of adolescents with learning
disabilities, Sara J. Hines
Reading Psychology, pg 29: Using an interactive singing software program: A comparative
study of struggling middle school readers
Building Fluency, Word recognition ability and confidence in struggling readers, Lori Wilfgong
Whats the perfect text for struggling readers? Try Poetry! Tim Rasinksi
Rasinski puts together a songbook for each child based on unit themes: Old Familiar Love Songs for
Valentines Day, Football Fight Songs, Fall and Back-to-School Songs, America, My Book of
Mother Goose Rhymes, etc.
Surface level
Deep level
Noam Chomsky said that language had two levels of structure: surface and deep. The surface
level of language is the sounds that Im making; the deep level is what youre doing with those
sounds. You have to turn them into meaning.
Rasinski shared an example of when he read part of a story aloud and the students finished it by
themselves. The part read aloud had much deeper comprehension than the part that was read
independently. Why? When an adult takes care of the surface level (phonics, spelling,
vocabulary, automaticity, prosody) then the kids are able to pick up on the deeper level
(background knowledge, comprehension strategies) better.
FREE
pumpki
n
pump
pup
cup
cap
sap
sip
sin
pin
kin
example: Ship Ahoy Word Ladder (p.s. you can actually Google a lot of these for free)
The Adventures of Runny Babbit, by Shel Silverstein: Shel switches the first letters of the words.
Reading these poems and trying to comprehend gives you a good example of how comprehension is more
difficult when your automaticity is limited.
A dogs tail wagging is an indicator of its disposition. Can we make them happy by wagging their tail for
them? No. We cannot force a kid to read faster. We can do things to make them become faster readers.
A fluent reader isnt someone who reads fast; they are reading with expression, changing their voice, their
rate, adding pauses when appropriate. Think of the word Dude. Now say it with varying expressions: 1.
As you say hi. 2. If youre upset with someone. 3. You
TEACHING VOCABULARY
Is it really reading if I have the song memorized?
If this is a concern for you, you can find other versions of the same song.
o Take Me Out to the Ballgame; Take Me Out of the Bathtub; etc. Melody is the same but youre
back to looking at the words. (See link for book full of nonsense versions of familiar songs.)
Fun fact: Dave Pilkey was one of Tim Rasinskys students!
o Bruce Lansky gigglepoetry.com
Take words from the song/poem out of context and into isolation HARVESTING WORDS
o Use literary terms and put them on the word wall
Whenever you read to your kids, ask the kids for 5-6 interesting words (the harvest)
that you can define and discuss, then put these words up on the word wall
o Example: Caleb and Kate, by William Steig
fierce, quarrel, odious, cantankerous, hoddy doddy
If these were from a song, you would have the words memorized, but in isolation
students must decipher which one is which
Vocabulary Declines, With Unspeakable Results Article : Students don't learn new words by studying
vocabulary lists. They do so by guessing new meanings within the overall gist of what they are hearing or
reading. And understanding the gist requires background knowledge.
Learning the Fry 600 Words list: accuracy is not good enough. It must be automatic, because
these words show up so often in your reading that if you have to sound them out, youll be bogged down
and unable to understand what youre reading.
o Add them to the word wall (do 10 a week)
o Send home over summer as homework
o READ a lot! Every story is a high frequency word story they are high frequency because they
show up a lot!
Word Bingo
Word Ladders (see previous example, links)
Words in a Word
Word Building
Article, McCandliss et. al.: Focusing Attention on Decoding for Children With Poor
Reading Skills: Design and Preliminary Tests of the Word Building Intervention
Making Words Pat Cunningham
Everyone has nine letters in front of them (e,e,i,d,n,p,r,s,t); teacher guides the
students to spell words with clues (red, rid, ride, pride, president)
Could be done with writing, so you dont have to cut out all the letters.
Making and Writing words, K-2
Making and Writing words, 3-5
1. Pi
6. Change a letter,
someone who is kind to
you is
nice (silent)
pie (silent)
3. Change a letter, what
happens at the end of
our life
niece (heart)
8. Prefix, working on de
denied
13. Use all letters
die (silent)
4. Add a letter to die,
make a fancy word for
eating supper
dine (silent)
independence
decide
Wordsmith.org/anagram will give you all possible words within a word; you choose the words youd like
to use in your lesson
Teach idioms
o Idiomconnection.com
o Theres a Frog in my Throat book, Loreen Leedy
o Ask students to do a particular writing assignment using as many idioms as possible
o Example of writing primarily with idioms (seen in a cooking magazine): You're a Sage,
Rosemary
TEACHING FLUENCY
Accuracy in word recognition
Model fluent reading
Assisted reading (I cant do it by myself, but I can do it with someone)
Practice (wide reading, deep/repeated reading)
Phrasing (good readers word in phrases, poor readers read word by word)
Synergy (synthesize; put all of these things together) fluency development lesson
Assisted Reading
o Analogous to learning to ride a bike
Hold students up for a little while until theyre ready to go on their own
o Variety of forms
Choral reading (group, antiphonal alternating boys and girls or group 1 and group
2, echo, cumulative one group at a time, once you join in you stay in; see example
below. Students join in on the line next to the letter group denoting the first letter of
his/her name.)
A-C
D-F
G-I
J-L
M-N
O-Q
R-S
T-U
V-Z
1. I pledge allegiance
2. to the flag
3. To the United States of America
4. And to the republic
5. For which it stands
6. One nation
7. Under God
8. Indivisible
9. With Liberty and Justice for all
This type of reading helps children focus on the words even for texts that are
memorized. You can do this backwards, too, having all students begin and
drop out on the line next to the letter group denoting the first letter of his/her
name. The more you change up the choreography, the more students focus
on the written words.
Practice
o Wide Reading - reading independently from a variety of texts to increase vocabulary, word
recognition and knowledge
o Deep Reading (Repeated Reading, Close reading) reading a text several times until it can
be read with appropriate fluency that reflects and enhances the meaning of the passage
These passages arent terribly long, but students need to read them over and over
again
In studies, students who practiced reading a passage got a little better with each
read. By the second passage, despite the 2nd passage being more difficult than the
1st passage, the first read of the 2nd passage was better than the 1st read of the 1st
passage. With each additionally practiced passage, student performance increased.
Repeated practice through Readers theater, poetry, song lyrics, speeches & oratory
(americanrhetoric.com), cheers, chants, monologues, dialogues, journal entries, letters
On Presidents Day, students can recite snippets of speeches theyve been given
from the site above. Teacher can invite parents on the day speeches are given.
Students and parents listen and guess which president gave each speech.
Article: I Never Thought I Could be a Star : A Readers Theatre Ticket to Fluency
Readers Theatre is not the icing on the cake, it is the cake
Lorraine Griffith, The Power of Readers Theatre
o improves not only reading but writing as well
Students can add more dialogue to books and infer what the
characters may be feeling, saying
I am the Dog, I am the Cat rewritten as I am the Student, I am
the Teacher, I am the Triangle, I am the Rectangle (incorporates
math), I am the Lizard, I am the Frog (incorporates science), etc.
o Every child in Lorraines class that year passed the state reading exam
Readers Theatre script: The Preamble of the Constitution
Phrasing
o The hallmark of a disfluent reader is a child that reads word by word. The natural unit of
reading is not the word; its the phrase. Think of the words of, if, and the. Define
them. Theres limited meaning because they are part of a larger phrase.
Recall the Fry 600 Words list and instead of teaching them as individual words,
teach them as phrases
So there you are.
By the water.
An angry cat.
Synergy
o Fluency Development Lesson (FDL)
Goal: Every single day, the students can read something that they could not read at
the beginning of the lesson. This gives students a huge sense of accomplishment.
With the FDL, students observe themselves daily achieving competency and proficiency in their
reading.
5. The teacher organizes student pairs. Each student practices the passage three times while his
or her partner listens and provides support and encouragement.
6. Individuals and groups of students perform their reading for the class or other audience.
7. The students and their teacher choose 3 or 4 words from the text to add to the word bank
and/or word wall.
8. Students engage in word study activities (e.g. word sorts with word bank words, word walls,
flash card practice, defining words, word games, etc.)
9. The students take a copy of the passage home to practice with parents and other family
members.
10. Students return to school and read the passage to the teacher or a partner who checks for
fluency and accuracy.
As you can see, in this 20 minutes of intense and deep practice, students learn to read a poem well
every day. However, not only do they see themselves as better readers, but they actually become
better readers as a result of the lesson.